"It's Just Like 1998": Why One Bank Is Haunted By Visions Of Credit Tremors Bursting The Tech Bubble

Earlier this week, Goldman Sachs, whose market-timing calls leave much to be desired, declared that tech stocks are “not a bubble”, and went so far as to predict that the secular increase in tech names could continue for decades, spawning vivid memories of Goldman predicting $200 oil months before the start of the second great depression, and before oil crashed by $100/barrel, wiping out a generation of muppets.

However, let’s just say that not everyone agrees with Goldman.

Back in March, just as the tech sector suffered its first big rout of 2018, Bank of America had the gall to tell the truth and observe that the “e-Commerce” sector, which consists of AMZN, NFLX, GOOG, TWTR, EBAY, FB, was now up 617% since the financial crisis, making it the 3rd largest bubble of the past 40 years, and at this rate – assuming no major drop in the 6 constituent stocks – was set to become the largest bubble of all time over the next few months.

Fast forward to today, when in a dual-pronged attack, Goldman’s ridiculous thesis was attacked again not once but twice, first by Leuthold Group’s Jim Paulsen who said that tech ETFs now account for 30% of trailing 2 year net fund flows, which was the biggest since – you guessed it – the dot-com bubble. Paulsen, who traditionally has had a cheerful, bullish take on markets, even went so far as to slam FANGs as the de facto harbinger of the next tech bubble:

“Haven’t we seen this movie before? Technology takes over the stock market late in a recovery cycle, seemingly making the bull ageless, pushing portfolios toward a more concentrated new-era exposure, stimulating investor greed bolstered daily by watching a chosen few (FANGs) rise to new heights, and convincing many that tech is really a defensive investment against late-cycle pressures which trouble other investments.”

A separate report from Bank of America’s Michael Hartnett confirms Paulsen’s fears. In his latest “flow show” report, the BofA CIO writes that in a year that has seen $140BN of inflows into stocks and $55BN into bonds, there have been 4 big flow losers in the second quarter:

However, more than offsetting this is, of course, the tech sector which has been the “big flow winner in Q2″ with another $2.3bn in inflows this week – the 2nd biggest week of inflows ever – and $17.3bn YTD on pace for record.

No doubt, much of this has been the result of momentum and self-fulfilling prophecies such as Goldman’s prediction that all is well. The result is that while numerous other assets have been hit badly already in 2018, including:

Brazil (EWZ) -34%,

Eurozone banks (SX7E) -29%,

Chinese real estate (SHPROP) -26%,

Argentine peso (ARS) -25%,

Turkish lira (TRY) -25%…

… which are all hedge fund “leverage plays”, meanwhile FAANG stocks are up +29% as investors pursue scarce secular growth, in the process turbo-charging the 9-year “conscious decoupling” of US tech & growth from EM/EU
leverage & value, just as what happened in 1998-99. We all know how that ended.

In any case, so far it has been so good for FAANG and tech names, which have successfully charged right through every wobble, hitting new all time highs as recently as Wednesday, with the “conscious decoupling” from the rest of the world seemingly unstoppable.

But it will stop, and BofA sees the end as soon as this summer, which is full of “event risk”:

As Hartnett writes, we are headed right into bad summer news for risk assets, first and foremost the vanishing of the QE security blanket.

As a result, investors are targeting weak credit stories, with a focus on Emerging Markets, which are now in a tightening cycle, which as shown in the chart below, have undergone 33 rate hikes past 9 months…

But to Hartnett, and going back to the tech bubble theme, the biggest risk is a “quick, deep tech selloff as investors continue to run an unambiguous barbell – “owning deflation, trading inflation”, “owning US, trading RoW”, “owning tech, trading everything else” – and that when investors delever, they can only sell what they own.

Or, as Bloomberg’s Andrew Cinko puts it, “if the times get tough and investors must delever they will sell “what they own,” as BofA says. Those who are rotating to financials and banks this week and away from tech may simply be trading the frying pan for the fire.“